SLIME PARTY - ELMER`S GLUE BORAX RECIPES EXPERIMENT

Transcription

SLIME PARTY - ELMER`S GLUE BORAX RECIPES EXPERIMENT
6/23/2015
GAK - Elmers Glue Borax Recipe | Experiments | Steve Spangler Science
Home
The Lab
Experiments
Slime Party - Elmer’s Glue Borax Recipes
SLIME PARTY - ELMER’S GLUE BORAX RECIPES
Throw a slime party with the best recipe using Elmer's glue and Borax
solution
Rating:
SUBMIT A REVIEW
Throwing your own slime party is as easy as a trip to
the grocery store to pick up these simple materials.
Depending on how you make it, you'll get something
that's stringy or slimy or more solid like putty. It's up
you and how you want to make it. This variation on
slime or putty or gak or flubber will probably remind
you of a similar substance found in many toy stores.
This is the most popular version of do-it-yourself
slime because it's so easy to make and serves as a
great visual tool for introducing students to the
properties of polymers.
Find out how to make the best Halloween
Slime using the secret ingredient the pros use... clear
PVA solution.
PURCHASE MATERIALS
Materials
Shaker Slime Kit
$19.99
Elmers Glue (8 oz bottle of Elmers Glue-All)
Borax (a powdered soap found in the grocery store)
VIEW
Large mixing bowl
Plastic cup (8 oz size works well)
Spoon
Measuring cup
Food coloring (the spice of life)
EXPERIMENT OF THE
Water
WEEK
Paper towel (hey, youve got to clean up!)
Zipper-lock bag (dont you want to keep it when
youre done?)
Water
Can't get enough of our hands-on
experiments and videos?
Sign up for Experiment of the Week
emails.​
SUBSCRIBE
EXPERIMENT
REVIEWS
PRINT EXPERIMENT
EXPERIMENT
Here’s the easiest way to make a big batch Elmer’s Slime. The measurements do not have
to be exact but it’s a good idea to start with the proportions below for the first batch. Just
vary the quantities of each ingredient to get a new and interesting batch of goo.
1. This recipe is based on using a brand new 8 ounce bottle of Elmer’s Glue. Empty
the entire bottle of glue into a mixing bowl. Fill the empty bottle with warm
water and shake (okay, put the lid on first and then shake). Pour the glue-water
mixture into the mixing bowl and use the spoon to mix well.
2. Go ahead… add a drop or two of food coloring. 3. Measure 1/2 cup of warm water into the plastic cup and add a teaspoon of
Borax powder to the water. Stir the solution – don’t worry if all of the powder
dissolves. This Borax solution is the secret linking agent that causes the Elmer’s
Glue molecules to turn into slime.
4. While stirring the glue in the mixing bowl, slowly add a little of the Borax
solution. Immediately you’ll feel the long strands of molecules starting to
connect. It’s time to abandon the spoon and use your hands to do the serious
mixing. Keep adding the Borax solution to the glue mixture (don’t stop mixing)
until you get a perfect batch of Elmer’s slime. You might like your slime more
stringy while others like firm slime. Hey, you’re the head slime mixologist – do
it your way!
5. When you’re finished playing with your Elmer’s slime, seal it up in a zipper-lock
bag for safe keeping.
http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/glue-borax-gak
1/2
6/23/2015
GAK - Elmers Glue Borax Recipe | Experiments | Steve Spangler Science
HOW DOES IT WORK?
The mixture of Elmer’s Glue with Borax and water produces a putty-like material called a
polymer. In simplest terms, a polymer is a long chain of molecules. You can use the example
of cooking spaghetti to better understand why this polymer behaves in the way it does.
When a pile of freshly cooked spaghetti comes out of the hot water and into the bowl, the
strands flow like a liquid from the pan to the bowl. This is because the spaghetti strands
are slippery and slide over one another. After awhile, the water drains off of the pasta and
the strands start to stick together. The spaghetti takes on a rubbery texture. Wait a little
while longer for all of the water to evaporate and the pile of spaghetti turns into a solid
mass -- drop it on the floor and watch it bounce.
Many natural and synthetic polymers behave in a similar manner. Polymers are made out
of long strands of molecules like spaghetti. If the long molecules slide past each other
easily, then the substance acts like a liquid because the molecules flow. If the molecules
stick together at a few places along the strand, then the substance behaves like a rubbery
solid called an elastomer. Borax is the compound that is responsible for hooking the glue’s
molecules together to form the putty-like material. There are several different methods
for making this putty-like material. Some recipes call for liquid starch instead of Borax
soap. Either way, when you make this homemade Silly Putty you are learning about some
of the properties of polymers.
Elmer's Slime is very easy to make, but it's not exactly what you'll find at the toy store. So,
what's the "real" slime secret? It's an ingredient called polyvinyl alcohol (PVA). The crosslinking agent is still Borax, but the resulting slime is longer lasting, more transparent... it's
the real deal.
ADDITIONAL INFO
Jeff Harken contributed this "history" of Silly Putty.
The history of Silly Putty is quite amusing. In 1943 James Wright, an engineer, was
attempting to create a synthetic rubber. He was unable to achieve the properties he
was looking for and put his creation (later to be called Silly Putty) on the shelf as a
failure. A few years later, a salesman for the Dow Corning Corporation was using the
putty to entertain some customers. One of his customers became intrigued with the
putty and saw that it had potential as a new toy. In 1957, after being endorsed on the
"Howdy Doody Show", Silly Putty became a toy fad. Recently new uses such as a grip
strengthener and as an art medium have been developed. Silly Putty even went into
space on the Apollo 8 mission. The polymers in Silly Putty have covalent bonds within
the molecules, but hydrogen bonds between the molecules. The hydrogen bonds are
easily broken. When small amounts of stress are slowly applied to the putty, only a few
bonds are broken and the putty "flows." When larger amounts of stress are applied
quickly, there are many hydrogen bonds that break, causing the putty to break or tear.
http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/glue-borax-gak
2/2